Estevan riot
The Estevan riot, also known as the Black Tuesday Riot, was a confrontation between the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and striking coal miners from nearby Bienfait, Saskatchewan which took place in Estevan, Saskatchewan on September 29, 1931. The miners had been on strike since September 7, 1931 hoping to improve their wages and working conditions.
Estevan Riot | |||
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RCMP officers during the Estevan Riot | |||
Date | September 29, 1931 | ||
Location | |||
Caused by | Labor unrest from coal miners | ||
Goals | Improved wages and working conditions | ||
Methods | Protest march | ||
Parties to the civil conflict | |||
| |||
Casualties | |||
Death(s) | 3 |
Background
The region's mining work was seasonal; during the rest of the year, between April and August, miners would work in the fields to supplement wages before they returned to the mines. However, the droughts in the prairies and the overall economic situation in Canada made that impossible. That led to an increasing number of men looking for work in the mines, which let mining companies to choose their workers.[1]
Furthermore, according to the Royal Commission that investigated the strike, Saskatchewan miners made half as much as their counterparts in Alberta and in British Columbia.[2] Most of the miners and their families lived within company housing. Annie Barylik, the sixteen-year-old daughter of a miner at Bienfait Mine,s described the conditions:
One bedroom, two beds in there, dining room, no beds in there, kitchen, one bed, and eleven in the family.... I think we need a bigger place than that. When it is raining the rain comes in the kitchen. There is only one ply of paper, cardboard paper nailed to about two-inch wood board.... It is all coming down and cracked... When the weather is frosty, when you wake up in the morning you cannot walk on the floor because it is all full of snow, right around the room.[3]
The miners were represented at the bargaining table by the local of the Mine Workers' Union of Canada (MWUC), which had been organized by the Communist Party of Canada's trade union umbrella, the Workers' Unity League.
Riot
Miners assembled in Estevan with their families to parade through the city to draw attention to their strike. The RCMP confronted them and attempted to block and break up the procession. Police violence broke out, and the RCMP opened fire on the strikers and killed three people. Many other strikers were wounded and arrested.
Annie Buller, working with the Workers' Unity League, spoke in Estevan in support of the striking workers. After the riot, Buller was charged and sentenced to one year of hard labour, to be completed at the Battleford Jail, and a $500 fine.[4]
Resolution
After a meeting with Royal Commission Counsel, members of both parties signed the following agreement:
We, the mine operators and employees in conference at the court-house Estevan, this sixth day of October, 1931, hereby agree that the mines be opened immediately and the men return to work on following conditions, viz.:
(1) That this be considered a temporary arrangement pending the findings of the Wylie Royal Commission and the possible drafting of a working agreement between the operators and the men.
(2) That committees of employees for each mine be a recognized organization in each mine.
(3) That the provisions of the Mines Act be observed in relation to check-weighers.
(4) That all water in the roadways and working face be removed by the company and that such places be kept as dry as possible.
(5) That the terms of any schedule or agreement finally reached between the operators and the men be made retroactive to the date of re-commencement of work by them.
(6) That there shall be no victimization or discrimination against men on account of the strike, particularly in reference to men on the payrolls as at September 7 last.
(7) That contract men be employed on an eight-hour basis, face to face, and the company men work nine hours a day.
(8) That because of working conditions in the various mines. the removal of slack and questions of overweight be left to negotiations between the operators and the committees of employees.[5]
Legacy
The event is still controversial in Estevan. The three striking miners killed have the inscription "murdered by RCMP" on their headstone, and locals still alternately erase and restore those words.[6] The Saskatchewan Federation of Labour has created a plaque to memorialize the strikers.
Popular culture
The riot was depicted in the controversial movie Prairie Giant: the Tommy Douglas Story in which Tommy Douglas is falsely portrayed to be present. Also, James Garfield Gardiner is portrayed as then being premier of Saskatchewan, but it was really James Thomas Milton Anderson.
The riot was depicted by James Keeleghan in the title track of the Small Rebellions album in 1990.
See also
References
- "On Strike: Chapter 2 (part 1)". 2007-05-21. Archived from the original on 2007-05-21. Retrieved 2017-10-27.
- Hanson, Stanley Duane (1971). The Estevan Strike and Riot. University of Saskatchewan, Regina. p. 50.
- [null] Wylie Commission, Proceedings, vol. 3, pp. 77-78.
- Deshaw, Garnet. "Buller, Annie (1896-1973)". The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan.
- "Preliminary Agreement," p. 9.
- Hewitt, Steven (1997-01-01). "September 1931: A Re-interpretation of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's Handling of the 1931 Estevan Strike and Riot". Labour / Le Travail. 39 (0): 159–178. ISSN 1911-4842.
External links
- Regina Leader Post Article on the Riot from the following day
- A Personal Editorial on the Riot including Photographs of Commemorative Plaques
- 1931 strike in Estevan Mercury
- A Paper discussing the Strike and Subsequent Riot
- Review of Bienfait: The Saskatchewan Miners' Struggle of '31 (Stephen L. Endicott, Toronto: University of Toronto Press 2002) by Lorne Brown, Labour/Le Travail 52 (Fall 2003).
- Estevan Coal Strike, Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan
- Estevan Strike and Riot, 1931, Oral History Centre (University of Winnipeg)